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Local communities hold the key to disaster recovery success

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Ben Knight
Ben Knight,

A new initiative advocates engaging more with people affected by events such as bushfires and floods to improve recovery after disaster.

With record heatwaves, damaging floods, raging fires, and violent storms, the world faces an onslaught of events causing severe disruption to communities. And how we respond in the aftermath of these disasters is becoming one of the most significant tests of our time.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no question that with climate change, rapid urbanisation and growing inequality, more people are at risk of experiencing disasters than ever before,鈥 says disaster response and risk reduction expert聽, the Judith Neilson Chair in Architecture at聽UNSW Arts, Design & Architecture. 鈥淕etting recovery right is crucial to lives and livelihoods, but how this tends to happen at the moment doesn鈥檛 prioritise people and, at worst, exacerbates disaster further.鈥

Prof. Sanderson has founded , a long-term, independent initiative to change how community-centred disaster recovery efforts are enacted and understood. Funded by the Judith Neilson Chair in Architecture endowment, it aims to instil active engagement and participation with local communities in all disaster recovery and resilience efforts.

Trawling through royal commission reports going back 25 years, Prof. Sanderson and his team have begun compiling stories of survival from close to a thousand people in communities across Australia through the . The purpose is to provide a platform for the many voices of local community members overlooked post-disaster and develop knowledge and tools to reform the sector from the ground up.

鈥淲e鈥檙e hoping people affected by disaster will add their own stories over time,鈥 Prof. Sanderson says. 鈥淗owWeSurvive champions best practices for community-centred recovery, which is about learning from the people directly affected by disasters.

鈥淏ecause, too often, those affected by disaster are not engaged in their recovery by current systems and that needs to change.鈥

Media enquiries

For enquiries about this story and interview requests, please contact聽Ben Knight, News & Content Coordinator, UNSW Arts, Design & Architecture.

笔丑辞苍别:听(02) 9065 4915
贰尘补颈濒:听b.knight@unsw.edu.au


The best approach to disaster recovery is where people鈥檚 voices are heard and acted upon. But this rarely happens. Photo: Adobe Stock.

Centring community voices

The consensus among all parties involved in disaster response is that community-centred approaches to recovery are the most successful and sustainable.

鈥淚f you talk with communities, many are willing to play a central role in their own recovery efforts after disasters,鈥 Prof. Sanderson says. 鈥淏ut disaster recovery is still dominated by top-down command-and-control philosophies where the needs of people are simply ignored.鈥

Prof. Sanderson says government agencies might not be set up to make enough time to engage with communities in the long term. Meanwhile, local councils and non-government organisations can be under-resourced and have different working methods, which makes coordinating a genuine community-centred recovery difficult.

鈥淭his can change, though; we just need to start thinking and acting differently to the status quo,鈥 Prof. Sanderson says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very possible to redesign disaster recovery to put people at the centre of decisions that affect them and their families.鈥


Prof. Sanderson says the critical shift is for decision-makers to listen better. This means making the space for proper assessment and consultation with people affected by the disaster.

鈥淟istening is about hearing and responding to the priorities of people who have had their lives disrupted,鈥 Prof. Sanderson says. 鈥淎ll the evidence shows recovery is more successful when people are empowered and engaged in the process of their own self-determination.鈥

In practice, this means better coordinating recovery efforts between organisations and spending time in disaster-affected communities to speak with those affected on the ground. It also means reviewing the actions of emergency response agencies and calling out bad practices that overlook community voices.

鈥淲e鈥檒l also be examining where we can better centre community in disaster prevention, mitigation and preparedness efforts,鈥 Prof. Sanderson says.

Too often, those affected by disaster are not engaged in their recovery by current systems and that needs to change.
Professor David Sanderson

Reshaping disaster recovery

One particular focus for the initiative is housing recovery after a disaster. Many communities affected by disasters face challenges with temporary shelters, high costs, and too-long timelines for rebuilding.

Furthermore, issues such as improper certification, poor design practices, and building in dangerous locations (such as flood plains) contribute to more significant damage and disruption to communities when floods, bushfires, and other hazards occur.

鈥淭here is no silver bullet for housing recovery after a disaster,鈥 Prof. Sanderson says. 鈥淏ut we have a project with the , where we will seek out the solutions that work best for the people affected by disaster in the short, medium, and long term.鈥

The HowWeSurvive initiative plans to produce a State of Listening report every two years to help build a long-term body of evidence about what works best for community-centred disaster recovery. An annual Disaster Recovery Almanac will also detail the first-hand experiences of people in the thick of disaster recovery in Australia.

鈥淭here are still a lot of questions about how community-centred recovery is best supported,鈥 Prof. Sanderson says. 鈥淏ut we鈥檒l continue to develop tools and share the best resources and knowledge to support communities with recovery efforts now and in the future.鈥